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In a Christian Churchyard
This field of stones, he said,May well call forth a sigh;Beneath them lie the dead,On them the living lie.
James Thomson
The Brothers
There were twa brethren fell on strife;Sweet fruits are sair to gather:The tane has reft his brother of life;And the wind wears owre the heather.There were twa brethren fell to fray;Sweet fruits are sair to gather:The tane is clad in a cloak of clay;And the wind wears owre the heather.O loud and loud was the live man's cry,(Sweet fruits are sair to gather)"Would God the dead and the slain were I!"And the wind wears owre the heather."O sair was the wrang and sair the fray,"(Sweet fruits are sair to gather)"But liefer had love be slain than slay."And the wind wears owre the heather."O sweet is the life that sleeps at hame,"(Sweet fruits are sair to gather)"But I maun wake on a far sea's faem."And the wind wears owre the heather....
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Mycerinus
"Not by the justice that my father spurn'd,Not for the thousands whom my father slew,Altars unfed and temples overturn'd,Cold hearts and thankless tongues, where thanks are due;Fell this dread voice from lips that cannot lie,Stern sentence of the Powers of Destiny."I will unfold my sentence and my crime.My crime that, rapt in reverential awe,I sate obedient, in the fiery primeOf youth, self-govern'd, at the feet of Law;Ennobling this dull pomp, the life of kings,By contemplation of diviner things."My father loved injustice, and lived long;Crown'd with grey hairs he died, and full of sway.I loved the good he scorn'd, and hated wrongThe Gods declare my recompense to-day.I look'd for life more lasting, rule more high;And when six...
Matthew Arnold
Voices
There are three mighty Voices that alwayCry out to God to speed His Judgment Day.The Voice of Devils, weary long agoOf dragging souls to Everlasting Woe.The Voice of Saints who hear, while anthems swellIn Heaven, the wail of sinners doomed to Hell.The Voice of Man, sick of his desperateLong throwing gainst the leaded dice of Fate.All things are weary of the strife and stress,In God alone is there no weariness?
Victor James Daley
Aboriginal Death-Song
Feet of the flying, and fierceTops of the sharp-headed spear,Hard by the thickets that pierce,Lo! they are nimble and near.Women are we, and the wivesStrong Arrawatta hath won;Weary because of our lives,Sick of the face of the sun.Koola, our love and our light,What have they done unto you?Man of the star-reaching sight,Dipped in the fire and the dew.Black-headed snakes in the grassStruck at the fleet-footed lordStill is his voice at the pass,Soundless his step at the ford.Far by the forested glen,Starkly he lies in the rain;Kings of the council of menShout for their leader in vain.Yea, and the fish-river clearNever shall blacken belowSpear and the shadow of spear,Bow and th...
Henry Kendall
Lucy Hooper
They tell me, Lucy, thou art dead,That all of thee we loved and cherishedHas with thy summer roses perished;And left, as its young beauty fled,An ashen memory in its stead,The twilight of a parted dayWhose fading light is cold and vain,The heart's faint echo of a strainOf low, sweet music passed away.That true and loving heart, that giftOf a mind, earnest, clear, profound,Bestowing, with a glad unthrift,Its sunny light on all around,Affinities which only couldCleave to the pure, the true, and good;And sympathies which found no rest,Save with the loveliest and best.Of them, of thee, remains there naughtBut sorrow in the mourner's breast?A shadow in the land of thought?No! Even my weak and trembling faithCan lift for...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Fading Flower.
There is a chillness in the air--A coldness in the smile of day;And e'en the sunbeam's crimson glareSeems shaded with a tinge of gray.Weary of journeys to and fro,The sun low creeps adown the sky;And on the shivering earth below,The long, cold shadows grimly lie.But there will fall a deeper shade,More chilling than the Autumn's breath:There is a flower that yet must fade,And yield its sweetness up to death.She sits upon the window-seat,Musing in mournful silence there,While on her brow the sunbeams meet,And dally with her golden hair.She gazes on the sea of lightThat overflows the western skies,Till her great soul seems plumed for flightFrom out the window of her eyes.Hopes unfulfilled have ...
Will Carleton
Vpon The Death Of His Incomparable Friend Sir Henry Raynsford Of Clifford
Could there be words found to expresse my losse,There were some hope, that this my heauy crosseMight be sustained, and that wretched IMight once finde comfort: but to haue him diePast all degrees that was so deare to me;As but comparing him with others, heeWas such a thing, as if some Power should sayI'le take Man on me, to shew men the wayWhat a friend should be. But words come so shortOf him, that when I thus would him report,I am vndone, and hauing nought to say,Mad at my selfe, I throwe my penne away,And beate my breast, that there should be a woeSo high, that words cannot attaine thereto.T'is strange that I from my abundant breast,Who others sorrowes haue so well exprest:Yet I by this in little time am growneSo poore, that I want...
Michael Drayton
Jabiru
Clarence, the pipe stem would grow hot with rage, then become agitated over his apparent inability to stop smoking. You see, he was a misfit in more ways than one. He didn't snap firmly in place when ordered, and more importantly, he resented the appendicular attachment to a place and time not his own choosing.Clarence would stew near the pipe bowl, rife with burnt ends and hacking smoke. The pipe had a bite and it was he who enlisted its bitter end.Now Clarence had designs of escaping tobacco road. He envisaged a future free of pool hall smells and the glandular malfunctioning of his predator owner. They say the stem of a pipe pressed against one's tongue for extended periods of time will cause aggravation, perhaps "malignant growths," worse yet, cancer. To Clarence, however, it was he who was sickened by the onru...
Paul Cameron Brown
The Everlasting Gospel
The vision of Christ that thou dost seeIs my visions greatest enemy.Thine has a great hook nose like thine;Mine has a snub nose like to mine.Thine is the Friend of all Mankind;Mine speaks in parables to the blind.Thine loves the same world that mine hates;Thy heaven doors are my hell gates.Socrates taught what MeletusLoathd as a nations bitterest curse,And Caiaphas was in his own mindA benefactor to mankind.Both read the Bible day and night,But thou readst black where I read white.Was Jesus gentle, or did HeGive any marks of gentility?When twelve years old He ran away,And left His parents in dismay.When after three days sorrow found,Loud as Sinais trumpet-sound:No earthly parents I confessMy Heavenly ...
William Blake
Human Lifes Mystery
We sow the glebe, we reap the corn,We build the house where we may rest,And then, at moments, suddenly,We look up to the great wide sky,Inquiring wherefore we were born For earnest or for jest?The senses folding thick and darkAbout the stifled soul within,We guess diviner things beyond,And yearn to them with yearning fond;We strike out blindly to a markBelieved in, but not seen.We vibrate to the pant and thrillWherewith Eternity has curledIn serpent-twine about Gods seat;While, freshening upward to His feet,In gradual growth His full-leaved willExpands from world to world.And, in the tumult and excessOf act and passion under sun,We sometimes hear, oh, soft and far,As silver star did touch with st...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Timur Name. - Book Of Timur. The Winter And Timur.
So the winter now closed round themWith resistless fury. ScatteringOver all his breath so icy,He inflamed each wind that blitheTo assail them angrily.Over them he gave dominionTo his frost-unsharpened tempests;Down to Timur's council went he,And with threat'ning voice address'd him:"Softly, slowly, wretched being!Live, the tyrant of injustice;But shall hearts be scorch'd much longerBy thy flames, consume before them?If amongst the evil spiritsThou art one, good! I'm another.Thou a greybeard art so I am;Land and men we make to stiffen.Thou art Mars! And I Saturnus,Both are evil-working planets,When united, horror-fraught.Thou dost kill the soul, thou freezesE'en the atmosphere; still colderIs my breath than th...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Mary's Death
Mary, ah me! gentle Mary, Can it be you're lying there,Pale and still, and cold as marble, You that was so young and fair.Seemeth it as yestereven, When the golden autumn smiled,On our meeting, gentle Mary, You were then a very child.Busy fingers, flitting footsteps, Never resting all day long;Shy and bashful, and the sweet voice Ever breaking into songAlways gentle, kind and thoughtful, Blameless and so free from art,'Twas no wonder one so lovely Found a place within my heart.You, while life was in its spring time, Made the Scripture Mary's choice;Jesus saw you, loved you, called you, And you listened to His voice.Ever patient and rejoicing, Shielded t...
Nora Pembroke
The Landscape
You and your landscape! There it liesStripped, resuming its disguise,Clothed in dreams, made bare again,Symbol infinite of pain,Rapture, magic, mysteryOf vanished days and days to be.There's its sea of tidal grassOver which the south winds pass,And the sun-set's Tuscan goldWhich the distant windows holdFor an instant like a sphereBursting ere it disappear.There's the dark green woods which throveIn the spell of Leese's Grove.And the winding of the road;And the hill o'er which the skyStretched its pallied vacancyEre the dawn or evening glowed.And the wonder of the townSomewhere from the hill-top downNestling under hills and woodsAnd the meadow's solitudes. * * * * *
Edgar Lee Masters
An Epitaph
Interr'd beneath this marble stone,Lie saunt'ring Jack and idle Joan.While rolling threescore years and oneDid round this globe their courses run;If human things went ill or well;If changing empires rose or fell;The morning passed, the evening came,And found this couple still the same.They walk'd and eat, good folks: what then?Why then they walk'd and eat again:They soundly slept the night away:They did just nothing all the day:And having buried children four,Would not take pains to try for more.Nor sister either had, nor brother:They seemed just tallied for each other.Their moral and economyMost perfectly they made agree:Each virtue kept its proper bound,Nor tresspass'd on the other's ground.Nor fame, nor censure they r...
Matthew Prior
The Widows' Tears; Or, Dirge Of Dorcas
Come pity us, all ye who seeOur harps hung on the willow-tree;Come pity us, ye passers-by,Who see or hear poor widows' cry;Come pity us, and bring your earsAnd eyes to pity widows' tears.CHOR.And when you are come hither,Then we will keepA fast, and weepOur eyes out all together,For Tabitha; who dead lies here,Clean wash'd, and laid out for the bier.O modest matrons, weep and wail!For now the corn and wine must fail;The basket and the bin of bread,Wherewith so many souls were fed,CHOR.Stand empty here for ever;And ah!the poor,At thy worn door,Shall be relieved never.Woe worth the time, woe worth the day,That reft us of thee, Tabitha!For we have lost, with thee, the meal,The bits, the morsels...
Robert Herrick
To Thaddeus.[1]
Farewell! loved youth, for still I hold thee dear,Though thou hast left me friendless and alone;Still, still thy name recals the heartfelt tear,That hastes MATILDA to her wish'd-for home.Why leave the wretch thy perfidy hath made,To journey cheerless through the world's wide waste?Say, why so soon does all thy kindness fade,And doom me, thus, affliction's cup to taste?Ungen'rous deed! to fly the faithful maidWho, for thy arms, abandon'd every friend;Oh! cruel thought, that virtue, thus betray'd,Should feel a pang that death alone can end.Yet I'll not chide thee--And when hence you roam,Should my sad fate one tear of pity move,Ah! then return! this bosom's still thy home,And all thy failings I'll repay with love.Believe m...
Thomas Gent
Brother And Sister
The shorn moon trembling indistinct on her path,Frail as a scar upon the pale blue sky,Draws towards the downward slope; some sorrow hathWorn her down to the quick, so she faintly faresAlong her foot-searched way without knowing whyShe creeps persistent down the sky's long stairs.Some say they see, though I have never seen,The dead moon heaped within the new moon's arms;For surely the fragile, fine young thing had beenToo heavily burdened to mount the heavens so.But my heart stands still, as a new, strong dread alarmsMe; might a young girl be heaped with such shadow of woe?Since Death from the mother moon has pared us down to the quick,And cast us forth like shorn, thin moons, to travelAn uncharted way among the myriad thickStrewn stars o...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence